No evidence for association of SCO2 heterozygosity with high-grade myopia or other diseases with possible mitochondrial dysfunction

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Abstract

SCO2 mutations cause recessively inherited cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. Recently Tran-Viet et al. proposed that heterozygosity for pathogenic SCO2 variants, including the common E140K variant, causes high-grade myopia. To investigate the association of SCO2 mutations with myopia, ophthalmic examinations were performed on 35 E140K carriers, one homozygous infant, and on a mouse model of Sco2 deficiency. Additionally, a screen for other putative effects of SCO2 heterozygosity was carried out by comparing the prevalence of the common E140K variant in a population of patients with undiagnosed diseases compatible with SCO2-related pathogenesis to that in a general population sample. High-grade myopia was not identified in any of the studied individuals. Of the carriers, 17 were emmetropic, and 18 possessed refractive errors. Additionally, no significant axial elongation indicative of high-grade myopia was found in mice carrying E129K (corresponding to E140K in humans) knock-in mutations. The prevalence of E140K carriers in the symptomatic cohort was evaluated as 1:103 (CI: 0.44–2.09) and did not differ significantly from the population prevalence (1:147, CI: 0.45–1.04). Our study demonstrates that heterozygosity for pathogenic SCO2 variants is not associated with high-grade myopia in either human patients or in mice.

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Piekutowska-Abramczuk, D., Kocyła-Karczmarewicz, B., Małkowska, M., Łuczak, S., Iwanicka-Pronicka, K., Siegmund, S., … Pronicka, E. (2016). No evidence for association of SCO2 heterozygosity with high-grade myopia or other diseases with possible mitochondrial dysfunction. In JIMD Reports (Vol. 27, pp. 63–68). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/8904_2015_468

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